Communications device, infrastructure equipment, and methods

ABSTRACT

A communications device configured to transmit signals representing data to one or more in-coverage communications devices forming with the communications device a group, one of the in-coverage communications devices acting as an active relay node for the communications device, so that the in-coverage communications device can transmit signals representing the data to the infrastructure equipment of the mobile communications network, and to receive signals representing the data from the in-coverage communications device acting as the active relay node. The signals transmitted to the in-coverage communications device are received according to a device-to-device communications protocol, wherein the signals transmitted by the communications device or received by the communications device include an identifier which identifies the signals to the in-coverage communications device. One of the other in-coverage communications device can be selected by the infrastructure equipment to act as the active relay node.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No.16/531,147, filed Aug. 5, 2019, which is a continuation of U.S.application Ser. No. 15/548,634, filed Aug. 3, 2017 (now U.S. Pat. No.10,405,257), which is based on PCT filing PCT/EP2016/051602, filed Jan.26, 2016, and claims priority to EP 15154751.0, filed Feb. 11, 2015, theentire contents of each are incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND Field of Disclosure Technical Field of the Disclosure

The present disclosure relates to communications devices and methods forcommunicating data using communications devices, and in particular tocommunications devices which are configured to perform device-to-devicecommunications.

Background of the Disclosure

Mobile telecommunication systems, such as those based on the 3GPPdefined UMTS and Long Term Evolution (LTE) architecture, are able tosupport more sophisticated services than simple voice and messagingservices offered by previous generations of mobile telecommunicationsystems. For example, with the improved radio interface and enhanceddata rates provided by LTE systems, a user is able to enjoy high datarate applications such as video streaming and video conferencing onmobile communications devices that would previously only have beenavailable via a fixed line data connection.

The demand to deploy fourth generation networks is therefore strong andthe coverage area of these networks, i.e. geographic locations whereaccess to the networks is possible, is expected to increase rapidly.However, although the coverage and capacity of fourth generationnetworks is expected to significantly exceed those of previousgenerations of communications networks, there are still limitations onnetwork capacity and the geographical areas that can be served by suchnetworks. These limitations may, for example, be particularly relevantin situations in which networks are experiencing high load and high-datarate communications between communications devices, or whencommunications between communications devices are required but thecommunications devices may not be within the coverage area of a network.In order to address these limitations, in LTE release-12 the ability forLTE communications devices to perform device-to-device (D2D)communications will be introduced.

D2D communications allow communications devices that are in closeproximity to directly communicate with each other, both when within andwhen outside of a coverage area or when the network fails. This D2Dcommunications ability can allow user data to be more efficientlycommunicated between communications devices by obviating the need foruser data to be relayed by a network entity such as a base station, andalso allows communications devices that are in close proximity tocommunicate with one another although they may not be within thecoverage area of a network. The ability for communications devices tooperate both inside and outside of coverage areas makes LTE systems thatincorporate D2D capabilities well suited to applications such as publicsafety communications, for example. Public safety communications requirea high degree of robustness whereby devices can continue to communicatewith one another in congested networks and when outside a coverage area.

Whilst D2D communications techniques can provide an arrangement forcommunicating between devices when the communications devices areoutside a coverage area provided by mobile communications network, theD2D communications techniques can also provide an arrangement forextending an coverage area of the mobile communications network, whenone of the communications devices is within the coverage area andanother is outside the coverage area.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE

According to a first example embodiment of the present technique thereis provided a communications device, which includes a transmitterconfigured to transmit signals to one or more other communicationsdevices via a wireless access interface in accordance with adevice-to-device communications protocol, the wireless access interfacefor transmitting signals to an infrastructure equipment of a mobilecommunications network when within a radio coverage area of theinfrastructure equipment. A receiver is configured to receive signalsfrom the one or more other communications devices via the wirelessaccess interface, the wireless access interface being for receivingsignals from the infrastructure equipment of the mobile communicationsnetwork when within the radio coverage area of the infrastructureequipment. A controller is configured to control the transmitter and thereceiver to transmit or to receive the signals via the wireless accessinterface to transmit or to receive data represented by the signals, andthe controller is configured with the transmitter to transmit signalsrepresenting the data to one or more in-coverage communications devicesforming, with the communications device, a group, one of the in-coveragecommunications devices acting as an active relay node for thecommunications device, so that the in-coverage communications device isable to transmit signals representing the data to the infrastructureequipment of the mobile communications network, and to receive signalsrepresenting the data from the in-coverage communications device actingas the active relay node. The signals transmitted to the in-coveragecommunications device and the signals from the in-coveragecommunications device acting as the active relay nodes are transmittedvia predetermined communications resources according to thedevice-to-device communications protocol. The signals transmitted to thein-coverage communications device are received according to thedevice-to-device communications protocol, wherein the signalstransmitted by the communications device or received by thecommunications device include an identifier which identifies aconnection between the communications device and the in-coveragecommunications device acting as an active relay node.

In some embodiments one of the other in-coverage communications devicecan be selected by the infrastructure equipment to act as the activerelay node, in place of the communications device from measurements madeby the one or more other in-coverage communications devices from thesignals transmitted on the predetermined communications resources.

Embodiments of the present technique can provide an arrangement inwhich, an out-of-coverage communications device, which is using anin-coverage communications device to act as an active relay node tocommunicate data to and/or from an infrastructure equipment can bechanged to use another in-coverage communications device whenpredetermined conditions are detected. The out-of-coveragecommunications device may be unaware of the change of the active relaynode. For example, the infrastructure equipment can detect that thepredetermined conditions have been satisfied and then switch the activerelay node from the first in-coverage communications device to one ofthe one or more other communications devices, of which theout-of-coverage communications device may be unaware.

In some examples, the group of communications devices may comprise onlytwo active communications devices, the out-of-coverage communicationsdevice and the in-coverage communications device. For this example, anidentifier transmitted with the signals is a unicast identifier, whichidentifies the one-to-one connection between the out-of-coveragecommunications device and the in-coverage communications device, or theone-to-one connection between the out-of-coverage device and thecommunications network which uses the in-coverage device as a relay. Inother examples the identifier identifies a group of communicationsdevices, which may include one in-coverage communications devices andthe out-of-coverage communications device. The identifier may thereforeidentify the connection between the out-of-coverage communicationsdevice and the in-coverage communications device to the infrastructureequipment.

The in-coverage communications device can be replaced with anotherin-coverage communications device, which is currently the active relaynode, as the active relay node for the out-of-coverage communicationsdevice.

According to another example embodiment of the present technique, thereis provided a communications device, which acts as an active relay nodeand comprises a transmitter configured to transmit signals to one ormore other communications devices via a wireless access interface inaccordance with a device-to-device communications protocol andconfigured to transmit signals via the wireless access interface to aninfrastructure equipment of a mobile communications network when withina radio coverage area of the infrastructure equipment. A receiver isconfigured to receive signals from the one or more other communicationsdevices via the wireless access interface in accordance with thedevice-to-device communications protocol and to receive signals via thewireless access interface from the infrastructure equipment of themobile communications network when within the radio coverage area of theinfrastructure equipment. A controller controls the transmitter and thereceiver to transmit or to receive the signals via the wireless accessinterface to transmit or to receive data represented by the signals, andthe transmitter and the receiver are configured with the controller toreceive the signals representing data transmitted by an out-of-coveragecommunications device which is not able to transmit signals to theinfrastructure equipment, to transmit the signals representing the datareceived from the out-of-coverage communications device to theinfrastructure equipment, or to receive the signals from theinfrastructure equipment representing the data for the out-of-coveragecommunications device, and to transmit the signals to theout-of-coverage communications device, the communications device actingas an active relay node for the out-of-coverage communications device.The signals received by the receiver from the out-of-coveragecommunications device and the signals transmitted by the communicationsdevice to the out-of-coverage communications device are transmitted viapredetermined communications resources of the wireless access interfaceaccording to the device-to-device communications protocol, and thesignals can be received by one or more other in-coverage communicationsdevices, which, with the out-of-coverage communications device and thecommunications device form a group of communications devices whichcommunicate using the device-to-device communications protocol.

According to example embodiments of the present technique a group ofcommunications devices are arranged to perform device-to-devicecommunications using commonly identified predetermined resources forwhich each of the devices of the group can detect signals transmitted byother devices in the group. The transmitted signals may be identified bya group identifier and/or a source/destination identifier of the signalsand/or any temporary or persistent/semi-persistent identifier which isassociated with the communication between the one or more out ofcoverage devices, the one or more in-coverage devices and theinfrastructure equipment. As such, for an example in which one of thedevices of the group is operating out-of-coverage, one of the otherdevices of the group can operate as a relay node if this device isin-coverage. Furthermore the other devices of the group which are incoverage can detect signals transmitted in the predeterminedcommunications resources transmitted by the out-of-coverage device. Theother in-coverage devices can determine a received signal strength ofthe received signals and report the received signal strength to theinfrastructure equipment. When the in-coverage device, which is actingas a source relay node is detected as providing a reduced link qualityaccording to predetermined conditions, then the infrastructure equipmentcan direct one of the other in-coverage communications device to becomea active relay node in accordance with a selection based on the reportedreceived signal strength measurements.

Various further aspects and features of the present disclosure aredefined in the appended claims and include a communications device, amethod of communicating using a communications device.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

Embodiments of the present disclosure will now be described by way ofexample only with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein likeparts are provided with corresponding reference numerals and in which:

FIG. 1 provides a schematic diagram of a mobile communications system inwhich in coverage communications devices are communicating via aninfrastructure equipment and at least one out-of-coverage communicationsdevice is communicating via one of the in-coverage communicationsdevices;

FIG. 2 provides a schematic diagram of the structure of a downlink of awireless access interface of a mobile communications system;

FIG. 3 provides a schematic diagram of an uplink of a wireless accessinterface of a mobile communications system;

FIG. 4 provides a schematic diagram of an out-of-coverage communicationsdevice communicating on an uplink and a downlink with an infrastructureequipment via an in-coverage communications device;

FIG. 5 provides a schematic block diagram illustrating an arrangement inwhich a plurality of communications devices form a group, which performdevice-to-device communications;

FIG. 6 is an illustrative representation of a message exchange flowdiagram for an intra-Mobility Management Entity (MME)/Serving Gatewayhandover process according to an conventional arrangement of an LTEstandard;

FIG. 7 is a schematic representation of part of an example process inwhich an out-of-coverage communications device changes an affiliationfor communicating data to an infrastructure equipment from onein-coverage communications device acting as a source relay node toanother in-coverage communications device acting as a target rely node;and

FIG. 8 is a part message exchange part flow diagram illustrating anexample embodiment of the present technique.

DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS Conventional Communications System

FIG. 1 provides a schematic diagram illustrating some basicfunctionality of a mobile telecommunications network/system 100operating in accordance with LTE principles and which may be adapted toimplement embodiments of the disclosure as described further below.Various elements of FIG. 1 and their respective modes of operation arewell-known and defined in the relevant standards administered by the3GPP (RTM) body, and also described in many books on the subject, forexample, Holma H. and Toskala A [1]. It will be appreciated thatoperational aspects of the telecommunications network which are notspecifically described below may be implemented in accordance with anyknown techniques, for example according to the relevant standards.

FIG. 1 provides a schematic diagram of a conventional mobiletelecommunications system 100, where the system includes mobilecommunications devices 101, infrastructure equipment 102, and a corenetwork comprising a serving gateway node 103, a packet data gateway 104which forms a gateway to an external network 105. The infrastructureequipment 102 may also be referred to as a base station, networkelement, enhanced Node B (eNodeB) or a coordinating entity for example,and provides a wireless access interface to the one or morecommunications devices within a coverage area or cell. The one or moremobile communications devices may communicate data via the transmissionand reception of signals representing data using the wireless accessinterface. The infrastructure equipment 102 is communicatively linkedvia the serving gateway node 103 and the packet data gateway 104 to theexternal network 105, which may be connected to one or more othercommunications systems or networks which have a similar structure tothat formed from communications devices 101 and infrastructure equipment102. The core network may also provide functionality includingauthentication, mobility management, charging and so on for thecommunications devices served by the network entity.

The mobile communications devices of FIG. 1 may also be referred to ascommunications terminals, user equipment (UE), terminal devices and soforth, and are configured to communicate with one or more othercommunications devices served by the same or a different coverage areavia the network entity. These communications may be performed bytransmitting and receiving signals representing data using the wirelessaccess interface over the two way communications links represented bylines 106 to 111, where arrows 106, 108 and 110 represent downlinkcommunications from the network entity to the communications devices andarrows 107, 109 and 111 represent the uplink communications from thecommunications devices to the infrastructure equipment 102. Thecommunications system 100 may operate in accordance with any knownprotocol, for instance in some examples the system 100 may operate inaccordance with a 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) standard where theinfrastructure equipment 102 may be referred to as a base station or anenhanced Node B (eNodeB(eNB)).

Also shown in FIG. 1 is a line 140 which represents an indication of amaximum range within which radio signals can be communicated to and fromthe infrastructure equipment or eNB 102. As will be appreciated the line140 is just an illustration and in practice there will be a greatvariation in respect of the propagation conditions and therefore therange in which radio signals can be communicated to and from the eNB102. As shown in FIG. 1, in one example one of the communicationsdevices 112 has moved to an area which is outside the line 140representing a range within which radio signals can be communicated toand from the eNB 102. According to the present technique thecommunications terminal 112 which is outside the range of the eNB 102may still communicate data to and from the eNB 102 but this is achievedby relaying the data via one of the UE's 114 which acts as a relay nodeto the communications terminal 112. In accordance with our co-pendingInternational patent applications with the application numbersPCT/2014/078087, PCT/2014/078093, PCT/2014/079338, PCT/2014/077447,PCT/2014/077396, PCT/2014/079335, the content of which are hereinincorporated by reference there is provided a device communicationstechnique which allows one or more communications devices to form agroup of communications devices which can communicate data between thegroup of communications devices without being communicated via an eNB.Such an arrangement can operate within or without a coverage areaprovided by a base station or eNB.

In one example 3GPP have completed a study item entitled “LTE Device toDevice Proximity Services-Radio Aspects” described in a technical reportTR36.843. According to the present technique therefore an arrangement isprovided in which a UE 112 which falls outside a coverage area of an eNB102 is able to communicate to the eNB 103 using one of the UEs which iswithin coverage by acting as a relay node. To this end, UEs 112, 114perform device-to-device (D2D) communications. However, a technicalproblem addressed by the present technique concerns an arrangement inwhich an out-of-coverage UE 112 performs a handover to anotherin-coverage UE 114 which is to act as a relay node.

In a situation in which an out-of-coverage UE is communicating with amobile communications network via an in-coverage UE acting as a relaynode, there are several mobility scenarios which can be considered.After an initial relay selection by an out-of-coverage UE there needs tobe a way to select and connect from a source relay UE to a target relayUE. Such an intra relay UE handover or re-selection requires anarrangement in which an out-of-coverage UE discovers the target relayUE. However, since an in-coverage UE acting as a relay node may notalways be transmitting a downlink signal, for example a discovery beaconsignal, then it may not be possible to make a comparison of measurementsfrom the current or source relay UE node (relay or eNB) and a potentialtarget relay node (relay). This differs from the typical handover from asource eNB to a target eNB, because the eNB always transmits downlinkcommon channels and synchronisation channels, so that the UE can alwaysperform the measurement.

Accordingly a technical problem addressed by the present techniqueconcerns an arrangement in which an out-of-coverage UE changes from onein-coverage UE acting as a relay node to another in-coverage UE actingas a relay. In the following description these will be referred to as asource relay-UE and a target relay-UE.

LTE Wireless Access Interface

A brief description of the LTE wireless access interface is explained inthe following paragraphs with reference to FIGS. 2 and 3 to support theexplanation of the example embodiments of the present technique whichare provided in the following paragraphs.

Mobile telecommunications systems such as those arranged in accordancewith the 3GPP defined Long Term Evolution (LTE) architecture use anorthogonal frequency division modulation (OFDM) based wireless accessinterface for the radio downlink (so-called OFDMA) and a single carrierfrequency division multiple access scheme (SC-FDMA) on the radio uplink.In accordance with the present technique, the wireless access interfacefor both the down-link shown in FIG. 2 and the up-link shown in FIG. 3can provide a facility for communicating data from a UE to a mobilecommunications network via the eNB and for communicating data to the UEfrom the eNB, but can also provide communications resources forperforming D2D communications to another communications device withoutbeing communicated via the eNB. The down-link and the up-link of thewireless access interface of FIGS. 2 and 3 respectively will now beexplained.

FIG. 2 provides a simplified schematic diagram of the structure of adownlink of a wireless access interface that may be provided by or inassociation with the eNodeB of FIG. 1 when the communications system isoperating in accordance with the LTE standard. In LTE systems thewireless access interface of the downlink from an eNodeB to a UE isbased upon an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) accessradio interface. In an OFDM interface the resources of the availablebandwidth are divided in frequency into a plurality of orthogonalsubcarriers and data is transmitted in parallel on a plurality oforthogonal subcarriers, where bandwidths between 1.25 MHZ and 20 MHzbandwidth may be divided into 128 to 2048 orthogonal subcarriers forexample. Each subcarrier bandwidth may take any value but in LTE it isfixed at 15 KHz. As shown in FIG. 2, the resources of the wirelessaccess interface are also temporally divided into frames where a frame200 lasts 10 ms and is subdivided into 10 subframes 201 each with aduration of 1 ms. Each subframe is formed from 14 OFDM symbols and isdivided into two slots each of which comprise six or seven OFDM symbolsdepending on whether a normal or extended cyclic prefix is beingutilised between OFDM symbols for the reduction of inter symbolinterference. The resources within a slot may be divided into resourcesblocks 203 each comprising 12 subcarriers for the duration of one slotand the resources blocks further divided into resource elements 204which span one subcarrier for one OFDM symbol, where each rectangle 204represents a resource element. More details of the down-link structureof the LTE wireless access interface are provided in Annex 1.

FIG. 3 provides a simplified schematic diagram of the structure of anuplink of an LTE wireless access interface that may be provided by or inassociation with the eNodeB of FIG. 1. In LTE networks the uplinkwireless access interface is based upon a single carrier frequencydivision multiplexing FDM (SC-FDM) interface and downlink and uplinkwireless access interfaces may be provided by frequency divisionduplexing (FDD) or time division duplexing (TDD), where in TDDimplementations subframes switch between uplink and downlink subframesin accordance with predefined patterns. However, regardless of the formof duplexing used, a common uplink frame structure is utilised. Thesimplified structure of FIG. 3 illustrates such an uplink frame in anFDD implementation. A frame 300 is divided in to 10 subframes 301 of 1ms duration where each subframe 301 comprises two slots 302 of 0.5 msduration. Each slot is then formed from seven OFDM symbols 303 where acyclic prefix 304 is inserted between each symbol in a manner equivalentto that in downlink subframes. More details of the LTE up-linkrepresented in FIG. 3 are provided in Annex 1.

Supporting an Out-of-Coverage Communications Device

It has previously been proposed to provide some arrangement for deviceto device communication within standards which define communicationssystems according to specifications administered by the 3GPP referred toas Long Term Evolution (LTE). These are defined in LTE Release 12 andRelease 13 and provide a facility for D2D communications. Moregenerally, a number of possible approaches to the implementation of LTED2D communications exist. For example, the wireless access interfaceprovided for communications between UEs and eNodeB may be used for D2Dcommunications, where an eNB allocates the required resources andcontrol signalling is communicated via the eNB but user data istransmitted directly between UEs.

In our co-pending International patent applications with the applicationnumbers PCT/2014/078087, PCT/2014/078093, PCT/2014/079338,PCT/2014/077447, PCT/2014/077396, PCT/2014/079335, there is disclosedvarious techniques for performing D2D communications between devicesusing the LTE up-link shown in FIG. 3. For example, in the Internationalpatent application PCT/2014/079338, there is disclosed an arrangementfor performing contentious resolution for D2D communications. Similarly,an arrangement for allocating resources using a scheduling assignmentmessages transmitted in a scheduling assignment region of an uplinktransmission frame is disclosed in International patent applicationPCT/2014/078093. An arrangement in which communications devices oflimited capability which may form machine to machine communicationsdevices can be arranged to perform device to device communicationswithin a limited set of resources (referred to as a virtual carrier) asdisclosed in International patent application PCT/2014/077447.Furthermore, an arrangement for identifying resources which can be usedfor device to device communications between a group of communicationsdevices is disclosed in International patent applicationPCT/2014/079335, the content of all of the above International patentapplications are incorporated into the present application by reference.As will be appreciated therefore these co-pending international patentapplications disclose an arrangement for an out-of-coverage UE 112 tocommunicate on a forward or up-link to an in-covergae UE acting as arelay node 114, represented by an arrow 120 in FIG. 1 and to communicateon a reverse or down-link from the relay-UE 114 to the out-of-coverageUE 112 as represented by an arrow 122 in FIG. 1.

FIG. 4 shows a schematic block diagram of a communications path betweenthe out-of-coverage UE 112 and the eNB 102, via the in coverage UEacting as a relay node 114. As shown in FIG. 4 the out-of-coverage UE112 includes a transmitter 401 a receiver 402 and a controller 404 tocontrol the transmission and reception of signals to the in coverage UE114 acting as a relay node. The up-link signals are represented by anarrow 120 which corresponds to that shown in FIG. 1 and the downlinksignals are shown by an arrow 122, which corresponds to that shown inFIG. 1. The relay UE 114 could be a conventional UE and so includes alsoa transmitter 401 receiver 402 and a controller 404. The in coverage UEacting as a relay node 114 operates in accordance with a conventionalarrangement but transmits signals on the uplink as shown by an arrow 107and receives signals on the downlink as represented by an arrow 106 toand received from the eNB 102 respectively. The eNB 102 includes atransmitter 404 a receiver 408 and a controller 410 which may include ascheduler for scheduling the transmission and reception of signals onthe downlink and the uplink in accordance with the wireless accessinterface shown in FIGS. 2 and 3.

As explained above, embodiments of the present technique can provide anarrangement for extending the coverage of an eNB, by utilising D2Dcommunications techniques. An example application is presented in FIG.5. In FIG. 5, a plurality of communications devices 501, 502, 504, 114form a group of communications devices 604 for which D2D communicationsis desired for the reasons explained above. As represented in FIG. 5,the communications devices 501, 502, 504, are outside a coverage arearepresented by a line 601 of an eNB or base station 602. As such the eNB602 cannot form or control any of the communications between theout-of-coverage communications devices 501, 502, 504. According to thepresent technique a plurality of communications devices 604 may performD2D communications whether they are in coverage or out-of-coverage of aneNB 102. As shown in FIG. 5 the group of devices 604 includes UEs 501,502, 504, which are out-of-coverage of the eNB 602 with one of the UEs114 within coverage. To this end, an in coverage UE 114 is operating toact as a relay node. Accordingly, in one example, the out-of-coverageUEs 501, 502, 504 may form a virtual cell with the relay node or incoverage UE 114 acting as a base station for each of theseout-of-coverage UEs 501, 502, 504. Accordingly, a broken or dash line510 illustrates a coverage area of a virtual cell formed by the incoverage UE 114. In one example, all control plane signalling iscommunicated to the eNB 102 via the in coverage UE 114 acting as a relaynode so that the control plane is managed by the virtual cell.

As explained above, embodiments of the present technique can provide anarrangement in which an eNB which is communicating with anout-of-coverage UE, via a first in-coverage UE acting as an active relayUE can identify a second in-coverage UE to act as the active relay nodein place of the first relay UE. The change from the first in-coverage UEas the active relay UE to the second in-coverage UE may be triggeredwhen the first relay UE can no longer act as a relay node because thecommunications link with that first relay UE is no longer viable, or thesecond relay UE is able to provide a more reliable communication due tomore favourable radio conditions or other criteria. Accordinglyembodiments of the present technique can provided an arrangement inwhich an eNB can switch from using a first in coverage UE acting as arelay node to another. Conventionally UE's perform measurements ofbeacon signals transmitted by base stations of eNBs in order todetermine which eNB provides a better link quality where a beacon signalreceived from a currently used base station falls below a pre-determinedlevel. Embodiments of the present technique can provide in one example:

-   -   An arrangement in which a plurality of in-coverage UE are        configured to be prepared to act as the relay, by utilising a        1:M broadcast facility provided for L3 relaying.    -   These in-coverage UEs perform measurements of the transmissions        from an out-of-coverage UE on known resources        -   May be measurements on known resources the UE may use for            data (PSSCH) or scheduling control (PSCCH) transmission        -   May require UE to trigger a beacon signal based on            measurement threshold as described in our reference            P106523EP (e.g. signal on PSBCH or synchronisation signal            transmission)    -   The relay UEs report measurements to the eNB.        -   Either event triggered (threshold based) or periodic.    -   The eNB determines which relay has reported the best measurement        result        -   e.g. highest measured RSRP from out-of-coverage UE    -   The eNB then switches/selects the UE reporting the best        measurement for next transmissions.        -   Since the out-of-coverage UE will just be monitoring for            particular resources/ID the actual relay selected may be            transparent to the UE. Newly selected relay will use the            same resources and ID.        -   Multiple relays may forward the data transmitted by the UE            to the eNB, or only a single relay (current selected relay)            may forward the data at any time. If only a single UE            performs data forwarding, still multiple UEs will perform            measurements and reporting to the eNB.

Intra-MME/Serving Gateway Handover

As background, in order to provide a better appreciation of exampleembodiments of the present technique a brief description of aconventional handover technique by a UE from a source eNB 606 to atarget eNB 608 is provided in FIG. 6. FIG. 6 presents a message flowdiagram of a current handover procedure for LTE between eNBs 606, 608. Amore detailed description of FIG. 6 is provided in Annex 2.

As will be appreciated from the flow diagram shown in FIG. 6, severalsteps and processes are conventionally formed in connection with ahandover from a source eNB 606 to the target eNB 608. A technicalproblem is then presented because a UE which is constructed to operateand communicate via the wireless access interface shown in FIGS. 2 and 3must be adapted to perform a handover process from one relay node toanother. Furthermore, the relay nodes may themselves be fluctuatingbecause they maybe mobile so that the group of UEs which areout-of-coverage and in coverage maybe dynamically changing as these UEsmove around. Therefore according to the present technique, handoverbetween relay UEs should follow a similar procedure, to that shown inFIG. 6.

The present technique therefore provides an arrangement, which allows aneNB to select a different in-coverage UE to act as a relay node inaccordance with a best available communications path to and from the outof coverage UE. Embodiments of the present technique can provide anarrangement in which an out-of-coverage UE does not need to performreselection or comparison of signals from a plurality of in-coverage UEswhich can act as a relay node for the out-of-coverage UE. Thereselection is controlled and triggered by the eNB and is performedwithout any handover signalling to the out-of-coverage UE. Theout-of-coverage UE is configured according to an example embodiment withthe relevant resources and an identifier, such as for example atemporary mobile group identifier (TMGI) upon initial relayselection/configuration.

An example embodiment is shown in FIG. 7. According to the exampleembodiment shown in FIG. 7, in which for simplicity, three possiblein-coverage UEs 701, 702, 703 are provided as an example to illustratean example embodiment of the present technique. According to an exampleembodiment of the present technique, each of the in-coverage UEs 701,702, 703 can act a relay node to an out-of-coverage UE 700. Furthermorethe out-of-coverage UE 700 does not need to be aware of which of thein-coverage UEs is acting as a relay node.

As shown in FIG. 7, the in-coverage UEs are able to measure the D2Dresources and so are able to detect signals transmitted by theout-of-coverage UE. Essentially the out-of-coverage UE 700 and thein-coverage UEs 701, 702, 703 form a group of communications devicesperforming D2D communications as the example group 604 shown in FIG. 5.As explained above, the D2D group of communications devices 700, 701,702, 703 are arranged to transmit and receive on known communicationsresources, which may form part of the LTE uplink as explained in theabove mentioned co-pending International patent applications. The groupmay have a group identifier for data transmitted via the sharedcommunications resources, as well as an identifier which may identify anindividual UE or service or radio bearer in the group. Thereforeaccording to the present technique data transmitted by theout-of-coverage UE 700 may be detected by any of the in-coverage UEs701, 702, 703 and so any of these in-coverage UEs forming part of theD2D group may act as a relay node.

An example process for one of the in-coverage UEs for an out-of-coverageUE according to the present technique as illustrated by the flow diagramshown in FIG. 8, which shows an example in which only two in-coverageUEs 701, 702 are available for simplicity. Thus the group of D2Dcommunications devices comprises the out-of-coverage UE 700 and the twoin-coverage UEs 701, 702. The example process shown in FIG. 8 issummarised as flows:

In step 1, during an initial setup phase, the in-coverage UEs 701, 702which can act as relay nodes are configured to perform and reportmeasurements of D2D transmissions to the eNB 102. From the reportedmeasurements, an initial active relay is selected. There may be severalways to perform this step, and so the present technique should not belimited to this initial phase. Example ways may be to perform a D2Ddiscovery transmission from all in-coverage UEs 701, 702, and then theout-of-coverage UE may selects. Alternatively the out-of-coverage UE maysend a transmission requesting that one of the in-coverage UE acts as arelay node. All of this maybe done using the resource pool configuredfor out-of-coverage transmissions and monitoring, or a specific resourcepool may be assigned, for example in the way described in Europeanpatent application EP14184600.6, the content of which are hereinincorporated by reference. The result will be that the out-of-coverageUE 700 may perform D2D broadcast transmissions in resources from a set(pool) which is known to the in-coverage UEs 701, 702, and thein-coverage UEs 701, 702 may perform a D2D broadcast transmission inresources from a set (pool) which is known to the out-of-coverage UE.During the initial setup, relevant identifiers such as a groupidentifier/TMGI/destination and source identifiers are assigned, and allof the D2D broadcast communication includes the relevant identifier(s).Furthermore, although a measurement setup may be configured using an RRCmessage, the relay “activation” may be implicit and performed as part ofthe eNB 102 sending data to a specific UE using the relevant radiobearer in step 2. In other words, an in-coverage UE becomes an activerelay node when it receives data with the relevant identifier. In FIG. 8signals are shown separately for ease of illustration.

In step 2, data received from the eNB 102 is relayed to theout-of-coverage UE 700 by means of a D2D broadcast communication. Thismay contain control and/or data, which may be transparent to the D2D PC5interface, for example control data for a D2D application layer, or maybe RRC control for the out-of-coverage UE, or user plane data such asvideo or voice. This is done using communications resources, which areconfigured for the out-of-coverage UE 700 to monitor, the specificresources are likely to be scheduled by the eNB 102. This may be done inway which corresponds with 3GPP release-12, for example the Relay UEsends D2D scheduling request to the eNB 102 and the eNB 102 grants somecommunications resources, or it could be optimised such that the eNB 102schedules resources when the data to be relayed is sent to the relay UE.

In step 3, the out-of-coverage UE 700 sends some data using resourcesfrom a pool, from which it has been configured to select, in for examplea corresponding way to that provided for a 3GPP release-12 D2D broadcastfunctionality, for example using a new separate resource pool, or ageneric pool the same as Release 12. The active relay forwards this tothe eNB using regular LTE uplink. In one example the active relay maytransmit the data with a relay and a service specific radio bearerconfiguration. In some embodiments all of the potential relay nodes mayrelay data received from the out-of-coverage UE, although in the presentexample it is assumed that just one in-coverage UE does that.

In step 4 the configured in-coverage UEs acting as relays sendmeasurements to the eNB 102. This may be triggered only when themeasurement result is above a set predetermined threshold, for exampleabove a threshold quality level. This may also be triggered upondetection of D2D data in the specific communications resources, or maybe sent periodically. A current definition of RSCP for D2D transmissionsis based on the source UE sending a D2DSS, therefore this may requirethe out-of-coverage UE to send a D2DSS at specific times (e.g.periodically, or before/after a transmission), or an alternative wouldbe to define a new measurement which can be done using the other D2Dphysical channels (e.g. data resources). Another alternative is that themeasurement is simply an indication of whether the relay managed toreceive D2D transmissions from the out-of-coverage UE. The measurementis shown here separately and is assumed to be an RRC MEASUREMENT REPORT.However there are other options such as sending measurement informationalong with the relayed data in step 3. The indication that anin-coverage UE 701, 702 managed to receive D2D data from theout-of-coverage UE 700 might also be implicit from the fact that thein-coverage UE 700 sends a scheduling request to the eNB 102 and thenthe eNB responds with data and communications resources.

In step 5 the eNB 102 performs evaluation of the measurement resultsreceived from the in-coverage UEs and selects the best in-coverage UE toact as an active relay node, which may be the same or a different relay.The most basic implementation would be simply to compare themeasurements and select the highest quality. In one example this isperformed by the eNB. The eNB 102 according to one implementation maytake into account other factors, for example even though one of thein-coverage UEs 701 may have the best measurement, a second of thein-coverage UEs 702 may be the only option for another out-of-coverageUE, while the first in-coverage UE 701 may be only suitable for thisout-of-coverage UE 700 and hence the first in-coverage UE 701 will beselected. The quality of the radio link between the eNB 102 and thein-coverage UEs 701, 702 may also be used to select the in-coverage UEto act as a relay node.

In step 6 the eNB 102 activates the second in-coverage UE 702 to act asa relay node of the out-of-coverage UE 700 and deactivates the firstin-coverage UE 701. As with step 1, this is shown separately and assumedto be RRC signalling, but it could be implicit as part of sending theuser place data to a specific UE.

Steps 7 and 8 are the same as steps 2 and 3, using a different relay.

Summary

From the above explanation it will be appreciated that embodiments ofthe present technique can provide:

-   -   Relay selection/reselection can be done without requiring any        additional signalling on the D2D resources.    -   Switching of relays is performed in eNB and under control of eNB        based on measurements reported by the in-coverage UEs as well as        other eNB implementation dependent information. This allows eNB        scheduling flexibility and control of the resources and UEs        used.    -   Relay selection may be entirely transparent to the        out-of-coverage UE since D2D resources used by different relays        are the same.    -   Minimizes impact to D2D broadcast functionality/PC5 interface        and limits changes to Uu interface only.    -   In fact this can be compatible even with an out-of-coverage        which implements only Rel-12 D2D functionality (assuming NAS        layer deals with routing—the fact that a relay is involved is        transparent entirely). Impact to PC5 interface        PHY/MAC/RLC/RRC/PDCP can be avoided entirely. Only relay UEs        need to implement new measurement functionality and signalling        to/from eNB.

Various further aspects and features of the present invention aredefined in the appended claims and various combinations of the featuresof the dependent claims may be made with those of the independent claimsother than the specific combinations recited for the claim dependency.Modifications may also be made to the embodiments hereinbefore describedwithout departing from the scope of the present invention. For instance,although a feature may appear to be described in connection withparticular embodiments, one skilled in the art would recognise thatvarious features of the described embodiments may be combined inaccordance with the disclosure.

Annex 1

The simplified structure of the downlink of an LTE wireless accessinterface presented in FIG. 2, also includes an illustration of eachsubframe 201, which comprises a control region 205 for the transmissionof control data, a data region 206 for the transmission of user data,reference signals 207 and synchronisation signals which are interspersedin the control and data regions in accordance with a predeterminedpattern. The control region 204 may contain a number of physicalchannels for the transmission of control data, such as a physicaldownlink control channel (PDCCH), a physical control format indicatorchannel (PCFICH) and a physical HARQ indicator channel (PHICH). The dataregion may contain a number of physical channel for the transmission ofdata, such as a physical downlink shared channel (PDSCH) and a physicalbroadcast channels (PBCH). Although these physical channels provide awide range of functionality to LTE systems, in terms of resourceallocation and the present disclosure PDCCH and PDSCH are most relevant.Further information on the structure and functioning of the physicalchannels of LTE systems can be found in [1].

Resources within the PDSCH may be allocated by an eNodeB to UEs beingserved by the eNodeB. For example, a number of resource blocks of thePDSCH may be allocated to a UE in order that it may receive data that ithas previously requested or data which is being pushed to it by theeNodeB, such as radio resource control (RRC) signalling. In FIG. 2, UE1has been allocated resources 208 of the data region 206, UE2 resources209 and UE resources 210. UEs in a an LTE system may be allocated afraction of the available resources of the PDSCH and therefore UEs arerequired to be informed of the location of their allocated resourceswithin the PDCSH so that only relevant data within the PDSCH is detectedand estimated. In order to inform the UEs of the location of theirallocated communications resources, resource control informationspecifying downlink resource allocations is conveyed across the PDCCH ina form termed downlink control information (DCI), where resourceallocations for a PDSCH are communicated in a preceding PDCCH instancein the same subframe. During a resource allocation procedure, UEs thusmonitor the PDCCH for DCI addressed to them and once such a DCI isdetected, receive the DCI and detect and estimate the data from therelevant part of the PDSCH.

Each uplink subframe may include a plurality of different channels, forexample a physical uplink shared channel (PUSCH) 305, a physical uplinkcontrol channel (PUCCH) 306, and a physical random access channel(PRACH). The physical Uplink Control Channel (PUCCH) may carry controlinformation such as ACK/NACK to the eNodeB for downlink transmissions,scheduling request indicators (SRI) for UEs wishing to be scheduleduplink resources, and feedback of downlink channel state information(CSI) for example. The PUSCH may carry UE uplink data or some uplinkcontrol data. Resources of the PUSCH are granted via PDCCH, such a grantbeing typically triggered by communicating to the network the amount ofdata ready to be transmitted in a buffer at the UE. The PRACH may bescheduled in any of the resources of an uplink frame in accordance witha one of a plurality of PRACH patterns that may be signalled to UE indownlink signalling such as system information blocks. As well asphysical uplink channels, uplink subframes may also include referencesignals. For example, demodulation reference signals (DMRS) 307 andsounding reference signals (SRS) 308 may be present in an uplinksubframe where the DMRS occupy the fourth symbol of a slot in whichPUSCH is transmitted and are used for decoding of PUCCH and PUSCH data,and where SRS are used for uplink channel estimation at the eNodeB.Further information on the structure and functioning of the physicalchannels of LTE systems can be found in [1].

In an analogous manner to the resources of the PDSCH, resources of thePUSCH are required to be scheduled or granted by the serving eNodeB andthus if data is to be transmitted by a UE, resources of the PUSCH arerequired to be granted to the UE by the eNB. At a UE, PUSCH resourceallocation is achieved by the transmission of a scheduling request or abuffer status report to its serving eNodeB. The scheduling request maybe made, when there is insufficient uplink resource for the UE to send abuffer status report, via the transmission of Uplink Control Information(UCI) on the PUCCH when there is no existing PUSCH allocation for theUE, or by transmission directly on the PUSCH when there is an existingPUSCH allocation for the UE. In response to a scheduling request, theeNodeB is configured to allocate a portion of the PUSCH resource to therequesting UE sufficient for transferring a buffer status report andthen inform the UE of the buffer status report resource allocation via aDCI in the PDCCH. Once or if the UE has PUSCH resource adequate to senda buffer status report, the buffer status report is sent to the eNodeBand gives the eNodeB information regarding the amount of data in anuplink buffer or buffers at the UE. After receiving the buffer statusreport, the eNodeB can allocate a portion of the PUSCH resources to thesending UE in order to transmit some of its buffered uplink data andthen inform the UE of the resource allocation via a DCI in the PDCCH.For example, presuming a UE has a connection with the eNodeB, the UEwill first transmit a PUSCH resource request in the PUCCH in the form ofa UCI. The UE will then monitor the PDCCH for an appropriate DCI,extract the details of the PUSCH resource allocation, and transmituplink data, at first comprising a buffer status report, and/or latercomprising a portion of the buffered data, in the allocated resources.

Although similar in structure to downlink subframes, uplink subframeshave a different control structure to downlink subframes, in particularthe upper 309 and lower 310 subcarriers/frequencies/resource blocks ofan uplink subframe are reserved for control signaling rather than theinitial symbols of a downlink subframe. Furthermore, although theresource allocation procedure for the downlink and uplink are relativelysimilar, the actual structure of the resources that may be allocated mayvary due to the different characteristics of the OFDM and SC-FDMinterfaces that are used in the downlink and uplink respectively. InOFDM each subcarrier is individually modulated and therefore it is notnecessary that frequency/subcarrier allocation are contiguous however,in SC-FDM subcarriers are modulation in combination and therefore ifefficient use of the available resources are to be made contiguousfrequency allocations for each UE are preferable.

As a result of the above described wireless interface structure andoperation, one or more UEs may communicate data to one another via acoordinating eNodeB, thus forming a conventional cellulartelecommunications system. Although cellular communications system suchas those based on the previously released LTE standards have beencommercially successful, a number of disadvantages are associated withsuch centralised systems. For example, if two UEs which are in closeproximity wish to communicate with each other, uplink and downlinkresources sufficient to convey the data are required. Consequently, twoportions of the system's resources are being used to convey a singleportion of data. A second disadvantage is that an eNodeB is required ifUEs, even when in close proximity, wish to communicate with one another.These limitations may be problematic when the system is experiencinghigh load or eNodeB coverage is not available, for instance in remoteareas or when eNodeBs are not functioning correctly. Overcoming theselimitations may increase both the capacity and efficiency of LTEnetworks but also lead to the creations of new revenue possibilities forLTE network operators.

Annex 2

As shown in FIG. 6 a UE 605 first receives a measurement control messageM1 and then performs packet data transmissions to and from the UE 605shown by an operation S1. In an uplink allocation message the source eNB606 transmits an allocation of resources to the UE 605. The UE 605 afterperforming measurements transmits a measurement report message to thesource eNB 606. In a process step 612 the UE determines whether or notto handover to a target base station in this case the target eNB 608.The source eNB 606 then transmits a handover request message in amessage M4 and the target eNB 608 performs an admission control step S5.The target eNB 608 transmits a handover request acknowledgement M6 tothe source eNB 606 which then transmits a downlink allocation message614 to the UE 605. An RRC collection re-confirmation and mobilitycontrol information is then transmitted by the source eNB 606 to the UE605 in preparation former handover in a message M7. In steps 616, 618and the UE 605 detaches from the old cell and synchronises with the newcell and buffers data 617 for transmission via the target eNB. In themessage M8 the source eNB 606 transmits a status transfer and follows bydata forwarding in a transmission step 620. The target eNB 608 thenbuffers packets from the source eNB 608 for the downlink transmission622 under instruction from the MME 624. The UE then transmits asynchronisation message M9 and receives an uplink allocation ofresources the message M10 which is acknowledged by an RRC connectionconfirmation repeat message M11. In process steps S3 the eNB transmitsdata packets to and from the target eNB to the serving gateway. Thetarget eNB 608 then transmits a path switch request to the MME 624 whichtransmits a modified bearer request to the serving gateway 630 in amessage M13. In a step S14 the serving gateway then switches thedownlink path which is transmitted to the source eNB 601 in a messageS4. The source eNB then transmits an end marker message to the targeteNB 602 in a step S6 and the data packets are transmitted from thetarget eNB to the serving gateway S8. The serving gateway 630 thentransmits a modifying bearer request message M15 to the MME 624 whichthen transmits a path switch request acknowledgement message M16 to thetarget eNB 608 and the target eNB 608 transmits a UE context releasemessage M17 to the source eNB 606. The source eNB 606 then performs arelease resources process in step S10.

Various further aspects and features according to example embodimentsare defined in the following numbered paragraphs:

Paragraph: 1. A communications device, comprising

-   -   a transmitter configured to transmit signals to one or more        other communications devices via a wireless access interface in        accordance with a device-to-device communications protocol and        the wireless access interface for transmitting signals to an        infrastructure equipment of a mobile communications network when        within a radio coverage area of the infrastructure equipment,    -   a receiver configured to receive signals from the one or more        other communications devices via the wireless access interface,        and the wireless access interface for receiving signals from the        infrastructure equipment of the mobile communications network        when within the radio coverage area of the infrastructure        equipment, and    -   a controller for controlling the transmitter and the receiver to        transmit or to receive the signals via the wireless access        interface to transmit or to receive data represented by the        signals, and the controller is configured with the transmitter        and the receiver    -   to transmit signals representing the data to one or more        in-coverage communications devices forming with the        communications device a group, one of the in-coverage        communications devices acting as an active relay node for the        communications device, so that the in-coverage communications        device is able to transmit signals representing the data to the        infrastructure equipment of the mobile communications network,        and    -   to receive signals representing the data from the in-coverage        communications device acting as the active relay node, wherein        the signals transmitted to the in-coverage communications device        and the signals from the in-coverage communications device        acting as the active relay nodes are transmitted via        predetermined communications resources according to the        device-to-device communications protocol, the signals        transmitted to the in-coverage communications device being        received according to the device-to-device communications        protocol, wherein the signals transmitted by the communications        device or received by the communications device include an        identifier which identifies a connection between the        communications device and the in-coverage communications device        acting as the active relay node.

Paragraph: 2. A communications device according to paragraph 1, whereinthe identifier is a unicast identifier, which identifies the connectionbetween the communications device and the in-coverage communicationsdevice acting as an active relay node.

Paragraph: 3. A communications device according to paragraph 1, whereinthe identifier identifies the group of communications devices comprisingthe communications device and the one or more in-coverage communicationsdevices.

Paragraph: 4. A communications device, comprising

-   -   a transmitter configured to transmit signals to one or more        other communications devices via a wireless access interface in        accordance with a device-to-device communications protocol and        configured to transmit signals via the wireless access interface        to an infrastructure equipment of a mobile communications        network when within a radio coverage area of the infrastructure        equipment,    -   a receiver configured to receive signals from the one or more        other communications devices via the wireless access interface        in accordance with the device-to-device communications protocol        and to receive signals via the wireless access interface from        the infrastructure equipment of the mobile communications        network when within the radio coverage area of the        infrastructure equipment, and    -   a controller for controlling the transmitter and the receiver to        transmit or to receive the signals via the wireless access        interface to transmit or to receive data represented by the        signals, and the transmitter and the receiver are configured        with the controller    -   to receive the signals representing data transmitted by an        out-of-coverage communications device which is not able to        transmit signals to the infrastructure equipment,    -   to transmit the signals representing the data received from the        out-of-coverage communications device to the infrastructure        equipment, or    -   to receive the signals from the infrastructure equipment        representing the data for the out-of-coverage communications        device, and    -   to transmit the signals to the out-of-coverage communications        device, the communications device acting as an active relay node        for the out-of-coverage communications device, wherein the        signals received by the receiver from the out-of-coverage        communications device and the signals transmitted by the        communications device to the out-of-coverage communications        device have been transmitted via predetermined communications        resources of the wireless access interface according to the        device-to-device communications protocol, the signals        transmitted by the out-of-coverage communications device and the        communications device including an identifier which identifies        the connection between the communications device and the        out-of-coverage communications device.

Paragraph: 5. A communications device according to paragraph 4, whereinthe identifier is a unicast identifier, which identifies the connectionbetween the communications device and the in-coverage communicationsdevice acting as an active relay node.

Paragraph: 6. A communications device according to paragraph 4, whereinthe identifier is a group identifier for the group of communicationsdevices comprising the communications device and the one or morein-coverage communications devices.

Paragraph: 7. A communications device according to paragraph 6, whereinsubject to predetermined conditions the communications device stopsbeing the active relay node for the out-of-coverage communicationsdevice and is replaced by one of the other in-coverage communicationsdevices.

Paragraph: 8. A communications device according to paragraph 7, whereinthe controller is configured in combination with the receiver and thetransmitter

-   -   to measure a signal strength of one or more signals transmitted        by the out-of-coverage communications device, and    -   to transmit an indication of the measured signal strength to the        infrastructure equipment for the infrastructure equipment to        determine whether the predetermined conditions are satisfied for        replacing the active relay node with the other in-coverage        communications devices.

Paragraph: 9. A communications device as claims in claim 7, wherein thecontroller is configured in combination with the receiver and thetransmitter

-   -   to measure a signal strength of one or more signals transmitted        by the out-of-coverage communications device,    -   to compare the signal strength with a predetermined threshold        and subject to predetermined conditions, to transmit an        indication of the measured signal strength to the infrastructure        equipment, the predetermined conditions including whether the        signal strength received by the communications device of the        signals has fallen below the predetermined threshold.

Paragraph: 10. A communications device according to paragraph 7, 8 or 9,wherein the controller is configured in combination with the receiverand the transmitter

-   -   to receive from, the infrastructure equipment an indication,        that one of the other in-coverage communications devices has        been selected to be the active relay node in place of the        communications device, and    -   in response to the received indication that one of the other        in-coverage communications devices is to act as the active relay        node for the out-of-coverage communications device, to stop        transmitting the signals representing the data received from the        out-of-coverage communications device, and    -   to receive the signals representing the data transmitted by the        out-of-coverage communications device to the selected other        in-coverage communications device,    -   to measure the signal strength of the received signals, and    -   to transmit the indication of the received signal strength to        the infrastructure equipment, so that the infrastructure can        select the communications device as the active relay node        subject to the predetermined conditions.

Paragraph: 11. A communications device according to paragraph 10,wherein the predetermined conditions include that the received signalstrength of the signals transmitted by the out-of-coveragecommunications device and received by the other in-coveragecommunications device exceeds the received signal strength of thesignals received by the communications device.

Paragraph: 12. A communications device, comprising

-   -   a transmitter configured to transmit signals to one or more        other communications devices via a wireless access interface in        accordance with a device-to-device communications protocol and        to transmit signals via the wireless access interface to an        infrastructure equipment of a mobile communications network when        within a radio coverage area of the infrastructure equipment,    -   a receiver configured to receive signals from the one or more        other communications devices via the wireless access interface        in accordance with the device-to-device communications protocol        and to receive signals via the wireless access interface from        the infrastructure equipment of the mobile communications        network when within the radio coverage area of the        infrastructure equipment, and    -   a controller for controlling the transmitter and the receiver to        transmit or to receive the signals via the wireless access        interface to transmit or to receive data represented by the        signals, and the transmitter and the receiver are configured        with the controller    -   to receive the signals representing data transmitted by an        out-of-coverage communications device which is not able to        transmit signals to the infrastructure,    -   to measure a signal strength of one or more signals transmitted        by the out-of-coverage communications device, and    -   to transmit an indication of the measured signal strength to the        infrastructure equipment, wherein the signals received by the        receiver from the out-of-coverage communications device and the        signals transmitted by the communications device to the        out-of-coverage communications device have been transmitted via        predetermined communications resources of the wireless access        interface according to the device-to-device communications        protocol, and the signals can be received by one or more other        in-coverage communications devices, which, with the        out-of-coverage communications device and the communications        device form a group of communications devices which communicate        using the device-to-device communications protocol, and subject        to predetermined conditions, to receive from the infrastructure        equipment an indication that the communications device is to act        as an active relay node for the out-of-coverage communications        device.

Paragraph: 13. A communications device according to paragraph 12,wherein the signals transmitted by the out-of-coverage communicationsdevice include identifier identifying a connection between theout-of-coverage communications device and the communications, theidentifier including a unicast identifier, which identifies a connectionbetween the communications device and the in-coverage communicationsdevice acting as an active relay node.

Paragraph: 14. A communications device according to paragraph 12,wherein the signals transmitted by the out-of-coverage communicationsdevice include identifier identifying a connection between theout-of-coverage communications device and the communications, theidentifier including a group identifier for the group of communicationsdevices comprising the communications device and the one or morein-coverage communications devices.

Paragraph: 15. A communications device according to paragraph 14,wherein the controller is configured in combination with the receiverand the transmitter,

-   -   in response to receiving the indication that the communications        device is to act as the active relay node,    -   to transmit the signals representing the data received from the        out-of-coverage communications device to the infrastructure        equipment, or    -   to receive the signals from the infrastructure equipment        representing the data for the out-of-coverage communications        device, and    -   to transmit the signals to the out-of-coverage communications        device.

Paragraph: 16. A communications device according to paragraph 14 or 15,wherein the predetermined conditions include that the received signalstrength of the signals transmitted by the out-of-coveragecommunications device and received by the other in-coveragecommunications device exceeds the received signal strength of thesignals received by the communications device.

Paragraph: 17. A communications device according to paragraph 14, 15 or16, wherein the predetermined conditions include whether the signalstrength received by the in-coverage communications device acting as therelay node for the signals transmitted or received by theout-of-coverage communications device has fallen below a predeterminedthreshold.

References

[1] LTE for UMTS: OFDMA and SC-FDMA Based Radio Access, Harris Holma andAntti Toskala, Wiley 2009, ISBN 978-0-470-99401-6.

[2] “LTE Device to Device Proximity Services—Radio Aspects” described inRP-122009.

[3] 3GPP technical report 36.843.

[4] ftp://ftp.3gpp.org/tsg_ran/TSG_RAN/TSGR_66/Docs/RP-142229.zip

[5] EP14184600.6

[6] PCT/2014/078087

[7] PCT/2014/078093

[8] PCT/2014/079338

[9] PCT/2014/077447

[10] PCT/2014/077396

[11] PCT/2014/079335

What is claimed is:
 1. Circuitry for an infrastructure equipment forming part of a mobile communications network, the circuitry comprising transmitter circuitry configured to transmit signals to one or more communications devices via a wireless access interface within a radio coverage area of the infrastructure equipment, receiver circuitry configured to receive signals from the one or more communications devices via the wireless access interface within the radio coverage area of the infrastructure equipment, and controller circuitry for controlling the transmitter circuitry and the receiver circuitry to transmit or to receive the signals via the wireless access interface to transmit or to receive data represented by the signals, and the controller circuitry is configured to with the transmitter circuitry and the receiver circuitry to receive an indication, from each of one or more in-coverage communications devices of a measured signal strength signal of one or more signals transmitted by an out-of-coverage communications device and received by the in-coverage communications devices, wherein the signals transmitted by the out-of-coverage communications device having been transmitted via predetermined communications resources of the wireless access interface according to a device-to-device communications protocol, the out-of-coverage communications device and the one or more in-coverage communications device forming a group of communications devices which communicate using the device-to-device communications protocol, and based upon the indication of the received signal strength received from each of the one or more in-coverage communications devices, the controller circuitry is configured to select one of the in-coverage communications devices to act as a relay node for the out-of-coverage communications device in accordance with predetermined conditions. 